Community · Repression · Legacy

What the Panthers Actually Were

The Black Panther Party for Self-Defense ran the largest free breakfast program in American history before the federal government adopted it. They operated 13 free health clinics, ambulance services, legal aid offices, and schools. J. Edgar Hoover called them "the greatest threat to the internal security of the country" — not because of their guns, but because of their politics and their programs. Most Americans know the story COINTELPRO wanted them to know. This is the documented record.

Period1966 — Present
Entries8 documented events
DomainCommunity · Repression · Memory
StatusLive
The argument

The dominant narrative about the Black Panther Party focuses on armed confrontations with police and internal violence — events that were largely manufactured or provoked by COINTELPRO operations. The documented record shows a different organization: one that built functioning community institutions in neighborhoods the government had abandoned, developed a 10-point political program that articulated specific policy demands, and was destroyed not because it was violent but because it was organized. The framing of the Panthers as primarily a violent group is COINTELPRO's most successful operation. It erased the breakfast programs, the clinics, the political education, and the model of community self-determination that the Panthers actually represented.

Era 1
The Organization, 1966–1968
1

Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale founded the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense in Oakland, California in October 1966. Newton was studying law at Merritt College; Seale was a community organizer. Their immediate context was Oakland's Black community, which experienced police brutality as a routine condition of daily life — the Oakland Police Department operated in Black neighborhoods with the explicit logic of an occupying army, a reality Newton and Seale documented by following police patrols with law books and legally owned firearms to monitor for rights violations.

The 10-Point Program they wrote that October is often reduced in popular memory to its most inflammatory demands. Reading it in full reveals something different: it is a specific, numbered list of policy demands — full employment, decent housing, education that teaches Black history and does not lie about American history, exemption from military service in wars fought against people of color, an end to police brutality, freedom for all Black prisoners, and fair juries. Most of the demands would be legally and politically unremarkable today. The 10-Point Program was less radical than it was ignored.

The Party spread rapidly from Oakland. By 1968, it had chapters in over 25 cities across the country, with a combined membership estimated at 5,000. The rapid growth reflected not just the appeal of self-defense but the hunger for the community programs the Panthers offered where no other institution was filling the need.

2

The Black Panther Party's survival programs — what they called "survival pending revolution" — were the operational core of the organization at its peak. They were not peripheral to the Panthers' politics; they were the politics made concrete. The Party identified what was materially missing from Black communities — food for children, medical care, legal aid — and provided it directly, using donations, fundraising, and the labor of Party members.

Black Panther Party — Documented Survival Programs at Peak Operation
Free Breakfast for Children
Began January 1969 at Father Neil's church in Oakland. Spread to 45 cities. Operated in churches, community centers, and Panther offices. Before school feeding program — children received hot meals before the school day.
~20,000 children/day
Free Health Clinics
13 community health clinics operating across the country by 1971. Provided basic medical care, sickle cell anemia testing (the Panthers pioneered mass sickle cell screening before federal programs existed), and referrals. Staffed by volunteer physicians and Party members trained as health workers.
13 clinics
Liberation Schools
Operated in Oakland, Chicago, New York, and other cities. Taught Black history, political education, reading, and math. Alternative to public schools that taught neither Black history nor critical thinking about structural conditions.
Multiple cities
Legal Aid / Prisoner Support
Provided legal observers at arrests, legal education on rights, connections to sympathetic attorneys, and support for families of incarcerated members. Direct response to the criminalization of Black communities.
National
Ambulance Service
In communities where ambulance response time to Black neighborhoods was documented as significantly longer than to white neighborhoods, the Party operated free ambulance service in some cities.
Oakland + others
Food Giveaways
Regular free food distribution programs in Black communities. By 1972, the Oakland Community Learning Center and related programs were distributing 10,000 bags of groceries per month.
10K bags/mo (Oakland)

The Free Breakfast for Children program — which the FBI's own documents describe as a threat to the United States — predated and directly inspired the federal school breakfast program that Congress adopted in 1975. The government expanded what the Panthers had proven worked, after spending years trying to destroy the Panthers who had proven it.

Era 2
COINTELPRO Targets the Party, 1967–1971
3

An August 1969 FBI memo from J. Edgar Hoover to field offices described the Free Breakfast for Children program as a threat to internal security because it created "a positive image of the Panthers" among the community and particularly among children. The memo ordered agents to "destroy" the program through infiltration, rumors spread to the churches hosting the breakfasts, harassment of donors, and disinformation campaigns to discredit the food. This is documented in the FBI's own files, declassified under FOIA.

The full scope of COINTELPRO operations against the Panthers included: forged letters designed to inflame tensions between the Panthers and the US Organization (Ron Karenga's group) that resulted in the deaths of at least four Panthers in Los Angeles; infiltration of chapters by informants who provoked violence and sabotaged operations; manufactured criminal charges; a media campaign coordinating with sympathetic journalists to publish negative stories based on FBI-provided disinformation; and direct coordination with police departments for raids and arrests.

The most documented single COINTELPRO operation was the December 4, 1969 assassination of Fred Hampton, the 21-year-old chairman of the Chicago Panther chapter. Hampton was shot in his bed at 4:45 a.m. during a raid coordinated between the Chicago Police Department and the FBI, using a floor plan of Hampton's apartment provided by an FBI informant. The state's attorney who ordered the raid claimed Hampton had "attacked" the police. Subsequent investigation found that 98 of the approximately 100 shots fired in the raid were fired by police, with one possible exception. Hampton was shot twice in the head at close range while likely unconscious from a drug administered by the FBI informant the night before. No officer was ever charged.

"You fight racism with solidarity. You fight capitalism with socialism. You fight imperialism with internationalism. You fight capitalism with socialism. You fight imperialism with internationalism. I am a revolutionary."

— Fred Hampton, Black Panther Party chairman, Chicago chapter. Assassinated December 4, 1969, age 21.
4

Between 1967 and 1972, the Black Panther Party went from the most dynamic Black political organization in America to a shadow of itself. The mechanism was a combination of COINTELPRO operations, legal persecution, and the internal fractures that the FBI deliberately engineered. Huey Newton was convicted on manslaughter charges in 1968 (later overturned). Bobby Seale was chained and gagged during the Chicago Eight trial. Eldridge Cleaver fled to Algeria to avoid return to prison. Fred Hampton was assassinated. Mark Clark was killed in the same raid. Geronimo Pratt was wrongly convicted of murder (based on FBI evidence later found to be fabricated) and served 27 years before being exonerated.

By the time the Church Committee confirmed COINTELPRO's operations in 1975, the Party as a national organization was effectively finished. The free breakfast programs closed. The clinics closed. The chapters disbanded. The 5,000 members who had organized across 25 cities dispersed — some to prison, some to community organizing under different names, some to withdrawal from politics entirely.

Documented casualties of COINTELPRO operations against the Panthers
  • Fred Hampton, 21 — Chairman, Chicago chapter. Assassinated December 4, 1969 in bed by Chicago police acting on FBI intelligence
  • Mark Clark, 22 — Peoria chapter. Killed in the same December 4, 1969 raid
  • John Huggins and Alprentice "Bunchy" Carter — LA chapter chairmen. Shot in a conflict engineered by FBI forged letters between Panthers and US Organization, January 1969
  • Geronimo Pratt — LA chapter deputy minister of defense. Wrongly imprisoned 1972–1997, 27 years based on FBI fabricated evidence
  • Dozens of other members imprisoned on charges later found to be manufactured or tainted by FBI informant activity
Era 3
Legacy and Misrepresentation, 1975–Present
5

The success of COINTELPRO's media campaign against the Panthers can be measured by what most Americans know about them. In polling and popular culture, the Panthers are primarily associated with armed confrontations with police, black berets and leather jackets, and internal violence. The breakfast programs, health clinics, liberation schools, and sickle cell testing are footnotes. The assassinations and political imprisonment are rarely taught in public school curricula. The Church Committee's confirmation of systematic government operations to destroy the organization is not part of the standard American historical consciousness about the period.

This framing has direct contemporary consequences: every time a Black political organization is described as "radical" or "threatening," the template is the Panthers — with the program removed and the confrontations emphasized. The pattern is exactly what the FBI's 1969 memo requested: destroy the positive image so that what remains is only the threatening one.

The actual political program of the Panthers — full employment, decent housing, community-controlled schools, an end to police brutality, fair juries — is indistinguishable in most respects from standard progressive policy platforms of 2025. The demands were not exotic. The threat they represented was the organization's effectiveness at meeting community needs that the government was not meeting, and its explicit critique of why those needs were not being met.

6

The Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities — the Church Committee, chaired by Senator Frank Church of Idaho — conducted hearings in 1975 and 1976 that documented COINTELPRO in detail. The committee confirmed: 295 documented operations against Black nationalist organizations; forged letters; manufactured conflicts; coordination with local police for raids; specific operations designed to prevent the rise of what Hoover called a "Black messiah" who could "unify and electrify the militant Black nationalist movement." FBI Director Clarence Kelley, Hoover's successor, acknowledged that some COINTELPRO tactics were "clearly wrong."

The Church Committee led to reforms in FBI oversight and the establishment of new guidelines governing domestic intelligence operations. What it did not produce: criminal charges against any FBI agent for COINTELPRO operations; compensation for families of those killed or wrongly imprisoned; official rehabilitation of the Panthers' reputation in public education; or acknowledgment in American history curricula that the federal government ran a documented, years-long campaign to destroy Black political organizations by any means necessary. The confirmation came after the damage. The acknowledgment came without the accountability.

7

The National School Breakfast Program, established as a permanent federal program by the Child Nutrition Act amendments of 1975, now serves approximately 15 million children per day in the United States. The program's core design — hot meals for children before school, prioritizing low-income children — is operationally identical to the Black Panther Free Breakfast for Children program that the FBI was actively trying to destroy in 1969.

The connection is not coincidental. Congressional testimony in the early 1970s by nutrition advocates, educators, and community organizations explicitly cited the Panthers' program as evidence that school breakfast could be implemented at scale. The program that the FBI described in internal memos as a threat to national security because it created positive views of the Panthers — and which the FBI actively sabotaged by pressuring churches and donors to withdraw support — became, within six years of those sabotage efforts, a permanent federal entitlement.

This is the pattern the archive documents: Black people identify a need, build an institution to meet it, the institution is destroyed, the government adopts the model. The Free Breakfast program is the most documented example. The HBCU thread traces the same pattern in higher education. The GI Bill thread traces it in housing and college access. The survival programs the Panthers built were not failures. They were effective enough that the government destroyed them and then implemented them itself.

8

The Black Panther Party formally dissolved in 1982. Bobby Seale became a community organizer and lecturer. Elaine Brown, who ran the Party from 1974–1977, continued writing and organizing. Fred Hampton Jr. — whose father was assassinated two months before his birth — runs the Prisoners of Conscience Committee in Chicago. The Oakland Community School, one of the Panthers' most successful institutions, operated until 1982 and became a model referenced in subsequent community education movements. Ericka Huggins, who ran the school, became a sociologist and educator.

The Party's model — community self-determination, survival programs, political education as inseparable from material support — has influenced every subsequent generation of Black political organizing. The Movement for Black Lives platform explicitly acknowledges Panther intellectual lineage. Community land trusts, participatory budgeting movements, and mutual aid organizations operating today trace their organizing philosophy to what the Panthers demonstrated could work at scale in the late 1960s.

What the record shows, stripped of the FBI's framing: the Black Panther Party was an organization that identified what was missing in its communities, built institutions to provide it, developed a political analysis of why it was missing, and was destroyed by the federal government before it could build a sustained movement. The story of what the Panthers actually were is, in large part, the story of what the United States was willing to do to prevent Black community self-determination from succeeding.

Built, Destroyed, Adopted

Panthers build breakfast program 1969
20K children fed
FBI orders it destroyed
Threat to security
COINTELPRO dismantles Panthers 1971
Assassinations, prison
Congress adopts school breakfast 1975
15M kids today
Panthers' reputation = COINTELPRO's version
Programs forgotten

COINTELPRO destroyed the Panthers. It then created the conditions for the Crips.

The same year COINTELPRO finished dismantling the Los Angeles Panther chapter, Raymond Washington founded the Crips in the same neighborhoods. The gangs thread traces the documented causal chain from federal counterintelligence to gang formation.

Read: After the Panthers →